Major General Herbert Lamb was a stern-faced individual; mostly this was due to the livid scar that ran down in a jagged line from his temple to the bushy jaw-length side-whiskers of his left cheek. The saber wound received some sixteen years before in the earlier Mexican conflict had severed facial nerves and frozen that portion of his pale features. Nowadays, whilst one side of his face flexed and moved normally, the other remained as still as stone and the tilted eyelid that half covered a glass eye held all the unmoving apprehension such lifeless things encourage.
He had once been a virile man, broad-shouldered and tall. The very picture of what was expected from a stalwart army officer. But since the savage wound and subsequent rise through the ranks the years had not been kind and his continual station behind a desk along with many committee dinners and copious consumption of alcoholic beverages had bloated the once classically heroic figure into a lounging heavyweight.
But he had achieved high station in the war office of the Confederacy and was a trusted and well-considered officer. Ostensibly he was fulfilling the role of Chief of Conscription but was also affiliated with the Signal Bureau and answered directly to the Secretary of War, Judah Benjamin in certain matters of intelligence gathering.
He sat, spread across a high, straight-backed chair in his neat and well-lit office, a handkerchief always in his hand for the leakage that often seeped down from his damaged eye. His good eye studied Courtney Monette standing at attention before him with as much chill as the glass one.
‘How blows the wind, Courtney?’ he asked, in a clipped military tone.
This was the signal opening for a Knight of the Order and advised Monette that the meeting was to be approached with that as its main concern rather than any other more mundane military affairs.
‘From the south, sir, as ever it does,’ Monette replied promptly.
‘Take a seat Courtney, relax.’
Monette visibly eased himself, he had by now become so used to the criticism encountered for his errant wife that he had fully been expecting another dressing down from his superior. He pulled up a chair before the desk and sat down, he kept himself rigid though as if appearing before the head master at his old school.
‘Report,’ snapped Lamb.
‘Yes sir, I have recruited two more likely personnel. They are both deserters from the other side but come with full information of the enemy and protest love of our cause. The brighter of the two seems to be a suitable body to carry out our mission.’
‘Name?’
‘Joseph Bellows, sir. The other is one Obie Tallant.’
‘Would that be Obadiah?’
‘I should imagine so, General.’
‘Then pray use the full title. We need our records kept straight in all matters and although it may appear of small mien, every detail can be of major importance at some future time. One never knows, Courtney.’
‘Of course, sir. I’m sorry, sir.’
‘Proceed.’
‘It is my intention to send them out shortly, Bellows here in Richmond and the other one into the north.’
‘Very well,’ Lamb approved. ‘How many do you have in the field now?’
‘Twenty-five, sir.’
‘And they are doing well?’
‘Indeed so, we are netting a handsome sum in bounty money all of which finds its way into the approved bank vaults as instructed.’
‘I need the figures, Courtney. Written accounts and receipts. You will present these to my adjutant, who is a loyal servant of the Circle and to be trusted.’
‘They are with him already, General. I delivered as I came in.’
‘Well done,’ smiled Lamb, one side of his face lifting whilst the other remained set. His tone was unctuous and superficially gratified but in reality he thought Monette a fool and would see to it he occupied his lowly station in the City Hall backroom until the war was over, after that he did not care what became of the man. Probably, Lamb considered, he would best serve at some distant frontier army station surrounded by dust, disease and wild savages. The thought pleased Lamb no end.
‘Now what of this business with your wife? I have never met the woman but they tell me she is something of a beauty.’
‘The very factor that led me astray,’ Monette admitted dolefully. ‘I am having the creature put aside, sir. She is at present imprisoned and awaiting court-martial.’
‘I fear not,’ said Lamb in a bored tone and, turning his head, he looked out of one of the two tall windows behind his chair. ‘You are misinformed.’
‘Indeed? How so?’ Monette asked in bemusement.
‘There has been escape. The woman made off with an accomplice. A city wide search is in progress as we speak.’
‘Really?’ frowned Monette. ‘I had no idea.’
‘It seems some buckaroo played the drunk to gain access to the prison and then succeeded in releasing her. I believe we lost some of our men in the process. Captain Meriwether is most upset as they killed his pet dog as well, so I am told.’
‘Oh dear,’ muttered an abashed Monette. ‘The woman is the very devil.’
‘You are too easily led, Courtney. I fear your brain, small as it is, is placed well below the waistline,’ he turned to fix his grim stare meaningfully on Monette’s potbelly. ‘Ample as that is.’
‘Yes sir,’ rumbled Monette in angry embarrassment.
‘We need able men amongst the ranks of the Knights, Courtney. Fit and able warriors for the struggle ahead. You hear those guns outside as the Union army approaches, this is nothing to what will be coming.’ For once the General’s face showed some sign of enervation and a flush came to his pale cheeks. ‘The Golden Circle is the future for this nation and even if we are driven from the South we shall rise again following a wholesome cause of true liberty in Mexico. It is there we must direct our energies. Here we are blockaded and starved of supply. The Confederacy cannot win this war, even though I shall do my utmost to make it so but we must plan for the future of our people. That is why the bounty funds are so important. They are the seed bed for the last true redoubt of the Confederacy.’
He sat back, wiping at the glistening stream running down from his ruined eye socket.
‘You must do your very best, Courtney. No philandering, or wasting your efforts in congress with some juicy Jezebel, no matter how fine she looks. Take on the mantle of a bold servant of the South, rise up from your sloth and behave as a genuine Knight of the Golden Circle and do battle for the good of your own kind.’
Duly chastised, Monette sat up straight at the rallying cry and felt a wave of duty-filled jingoism running through his florid form.
‘I shall, sir. On my oath, I shall.’
‘Good, Courtney. I’m sure you will. Now, get along and be about your business. See we are well supplied with cash for our needs.’
As Monette left his commander, Kirby was making his way on foot towards the sound of the guns.
He was dressed as a Confederate infantry sergeant thanks to Lomas, who had also managed to find them a small house to rent on the Shockoe Creek side of town. It was one of the better areas of the city and Lomas believed that amongst the fine houses their presence was less likely to arouse interest as many of the wealthier residents had already fled in anticipation of the town being overrun and falling under Federal control.
They had a clearer idea of the form of the campaign now and Kirby knew that the Union forces were being forced back from their original almost overwhelming position. This was the result of the commander General McClellan’s dithering, partly thanks to his own over cautious attitude and also some bad intelligence. The main thrust of the advance, Kirby had been told, was based on the northern side of the peninsular. Yet still, close as they were, the General had no plans ready for a final assault on the capital and in the interim the Confederate army under its new commander, Robert E. Lee had moved in and were making successful advances along the Shenandoah Valley. As Kirby struggled to reach the Union troops alongside the banks of the York River he did not know that the indecisive McClellan was already considering moving his base south.
The first signs of conflict for Kirby were when he stumbled into a Confederate field hospital situated in a thick grove of trees behind the lines. It was an awesome scene of carnage that Kirby came across. A blood streaked surgeon stood before him in an open sided tent, his unfortunate victim lying screaming on a table before him and held down by four sturdy men. The exhausted doctor looked up unseeing at Kirby for a long moment as he wiped his stained surgical saw across the bloody apron around his middle and then he bent again to begin his work.
It was a flyblown butcher shop more akin to an abattoir than a hospital. Bloody and flayed amputated limbs lay piled in heaps before the tent, thrown like trash outside the tented hospital in the flurry of emergency. The grass itself around the operating tent was stained red by the flow of blood, the green lost from sight under the fountains that sprung from the surgeon’s incisions. There, on that appalling carpet lay ranked the many wounded awaiting their turn before the doctor’s ministrations and Kirby saw the full array of the terrible effects of modern warfare. The soft lead bullets that splintered bone in ghastly wounds and necessitated the expedient method of amputation rather than time-consuming surgery. Deadly canister shot that ripped soft flesh apart with the hail of ball that spread out mercilessly on explosion. Men lay in their hundreds with such wounds, wailing in anguish without attention or water as orderlies rushed in with a continuous chain of stretcher born patients.
An ugly inferno scene and Kirby, unnoticed in the general mayhem, slipped on through. There were Negroes at work beyond the tent, conscripted field workers given the unpleasant task of dealing with the dead and here they resorted to wheelbarrows to carry the remains, sometimes two or three at a time carrying them to waiting wagons bound for a collective grave. The Negroes lay of their grim work and stood, passively looking at Kirby with large sorrowful eyes as he passed by. Silent though they were, their accusation appeared total. How could any Christian man inflict such absolute horror on another? They seemed to be asking.
He came upon a lone soldier, separated from the others and propped up against a tree on the outskirts of the grove. The man still lived and his pale grey eyes stared at Kirby with glazed intensity. There was nothing below his upper lip only a hanging river of blood and tissue where his entire lower jaw had been shot away. He motioned at Kirby, hand held out in a pleading gesture. He was attempting to make sound from the jutting upper head that appeared grotesquely imbalanced seated on its missing lower half.
The only succor Kirby could offer the wretched man was a hand of comfort on the shoulder as he passed by. It was a harrowing experience for Kirby who had already seen enough death and suffering in his life but this oasis of horror was on a scale beyond his experience. He hardened his heart to the atrocities with the determination that at least the information he carried might bring the devastating effects of the war to an earlier conclusion and with those encouraging thoughts he pressed on.
What awaited him was largely unknown but he guessed his trickiest point would be when he came upon the fluid lines of battle themselves and his hope was to make his way through at some point on the Chickahominy River, the central of the three water courses that ran down the peninsular and divided the two armies. Once across, Kirby believed he would be safely within the Union lines.
He trekked on through open farmland meeting everywhere the hurried bustle of troops and cavalry either bound for the front or lying exhausted and drained by the fighting. Stumbling wounded, blood stained and ragged staggered towards him as they moved to the rear, either alone or helped by less incapacitated companions. Palls of smoke hung on the horizon and isolated farms burned, the livestock lying bloated and dead around the roaring blaze. Amidst the fog of hazy smoke, split pole fences lay broken and scattered like jagged teeth and barns were holed and blasted roofless from the relentless cannon fire. Here and there he came across sudden collections of bodies, whole companies lying together in groups fallen under sniper ambush or caught in the swathing blast of cannon shell.
It was like walking though a sea of death for Kirby and always there was the nearing rumble of gunfire.
As Kirby made his difficult way through the battleground Lomas meanwhile had been entered as a Knight of the Golden Circle and after attending all the pseudo-mystical arrangements of his initiation had finally discovered the true leader of the organization in Richmond. Both he and Belle discussed it as they stood in the upper rooms of their rented house and Belle experimented with her widow’s clothing.
‘My God!’ she muttered, looking at herself in the full-length mirror. ‘Must I wear this?’
The black skirt was a dense black beehive shape in sheer wool and belled sleeves. It came with a tight waist and fitted bodice that did nothing to disguise Belle’s fulsome figure but merely enhanced it. Around her shoulders she wore a shawl in an attempt to disguise this winning attribute and on her head a small hat that supported a thick veil hanging down to her breast. Under the veil her long golden hair was pomaded and pinned up out of sight into a bun at her neck.
‘Looks fine to me,’ grinned Lomas.
‘It’s stifling,’ complained Belle.
‘Maybe, but it keeps you well hidden. Kinda mysterious looking too, maybe that’ll appeal to our guy.’
‘Tell me more about the man.’
Lomas shrugged, ‘Major General Lamb, he was pretty much a hero in his day, during the thing with Mexico. He was in the battle for Veracruz and made a lot of good contacts who were serving with him down there at the same time, Lee, Longstreet, Jackson. Top-notch officers. Served with the cavalry in Texas until the secession and then went over to the Confederacy. He came out of Florida originally but was military schooled in Virginia. Went on to West Point and came out a brevetted second lieutenant, after that it was a pretty rapid rise up the rank chain. He suffered a minor wound at Bull Run that was enough to get him noticed and brought to Richmond. Took a saber cut to the face down in Mexico though, so he ain’t so pretty looking.’
Belle wrinkled her lip, ‘That sounds real nice.’
‘Not much,’ agreed Lomas. ‘He’s smart though. Misguided but smart. Don’t underestimate him, Belle. He didn’t get to be head honcho of the Golden Circle by being no dumb-ass.’
‘So how do I play this?’
‘The grieving widow, I guess. That’s what you’re dressed for, but remember Monette is under his command so keep yourself covered at all times. It wouldn’t do for him to walk in and see you sitting there in all your glory. Basically, I think you’ve got to appeal to the General’s vanity. You know how to do it, Belle. Lost and forlorn and in need of a shoulder to cry on.’
Belle nodded, the veil rising and falling in a wave. ‘I know. Don’t worry it’ll be fine. You heard any word from Kirby yet?’
Lomas shook his head, ‘Too soon. He’ll have a ways to go before he can get back to us. It’ll be a hell hole out there if he’s stuck in the middle of the fighting.’
‘That’s a little worrying.’
Lomas studied her as best he could with her expression hidden away under the veil. ‘I thought you two were on the verge of falling apart back in that coal yard.’
‘Oh, its just his damned attitude,’ Belle said, throwing up the veil, her eyes flashing angrily. ‘He thinks we can do this job by me playing the virgin queen.’
‘Ah, its only that he cares for you, Belle. I ain’t ever seen him take a thing so hard. Kirby Langstrom jealous, why I never thought I’d see the day.’
‘What’s to be jealous of?’
‘He doesn’t want to think less of you, I reckon. He’s in love with you, girl. Allow the man some slack, will you?’
‘I think he just wants another notch on his gun, is all,’ Belle said indifferently.
‘Not so, ma’am. No siree, Kirby ain’t like that. He’s got it bad and you’d better believe it.’
‘I don’t know,’ Belle wriggled uncomfortably but whether it was the dress or her embarrassment Lomas could not tell. ‘He’s nice enough, that’s for sure but as for the other, well I just don’t know.’
‘He cares, Belle and in my book that’s good enough.’
‘Maybe I want a little more, Lomas. I’m not ready for the whole cooking and sewing and breeding a bevy of brats in some sod roofed frontier hut. I had enough of that as a youngster. It took me a long while to get away from that stinking hole in the Appalachians and now I’m kind of used to fine clothes and good eats. I don’t reckon I want to go back to scrimping and wearing broadcloth and hand-me-downs.’
‘You’ll see, honey. When you’re as old as me you’ll be only too happy to content yourself with a caring body, whatever covers it.’
‘And I suppose you’ve got some sweet little thing tucked away somewhere have you?’ Belle asked slyly.
‘Maybe,’ Lomas answered in a vague manner. ‘But never mind that, right now we have to get you up there with Herbert Lamb so you can try your winning ways on him. What we need is information, Belle. Who his contacts are, particularly in the north. We have to crush this bounty jumping ring before it takes a hold and undermines the whole army, let alone allowing these Rebels to form themselves a bolt-hole state in Mexico.’
‘You’ve arranged for me to see him?’
‘Yes, this afternoon, I’m to present you within the hour. I know it’s not allowing much time but this is urgent. Now, listen up, you’re to be Louisa Moresome, the supposed widow of one of the Knights, a fellow called Josh Moresome. He had just joined up and so wasn’t well known in the Circle. He was an ordinary soldier, a corporal who was killed up at Seven Pines, they lost over nine hundred men dead that day and four hundred of them are missing including your late husband.’
‘Where’s he from? Somewhere I know?’
‘Maybe, it’s in Tennessee. Little place, barely on the map, called Annalein.’
‘I don’t know it but I reckon I can fudge around that.’
‘You won’t be alone, I doubt if anybody’s even heard of the place it don’t have no more than a store and an outhouse as far as I can determine.’
‘What did he do for a living? And are there any children?’
‘Horse wrangler is what he’s listed as with two little ones. No names or gender I’m afraid.’
‘That one we’ll have to walk around then.’
‘Do your best, Belle.’
‘I always do, Lomas.’
‘May I present Mrs. Moresome, General,’ Lomas bowed slightly and levered Belle forward with a gentle touch on the elbow.
‘Ma’am,’ said Lamb, rising politely from his desk.
‘I bring the lady to your attention, General, as she has just lost her husband in our service and is in some need of assistance. I hope you may help.’
‘Will you take a seat, Mrs. Moresome?’ asked Lamb, indicating that Lomas should bring a chair over before his desk.
‘Too kind,’ mumbled Belle, lifting a handkerchief under the edge of her veil and pretending a tear.
‘I am most sorry to hear of your loss, ma’am,’ Lamb said, sitting again as he studied the black clothed figure before him. ‘A tragedy for your family I’m sure.’
‘Thank you,’ Belle stifled a sob.
‘Be assured these boys shall not be forgotten, Mrs. Moresome, you may have my word on it,’ Lamb promised. ‘They shall go down in history as true heroes of the Confederacy.’
‘It shall not do my little one’s back in Annalein much good I fear, General,’ whispered Belle.
‘No, at first not perhaps. But in time, when we are victorious then they shall appreciate the freedoms gained by their father’s sacrifice.’
Lamb was spouting the expected platitudes but all the time he spoke he studied Belle, trying to ascertain from her posture what manner of woman she was.
‘Forgive me General,’ interrupted Lomas. ‘I have other matters to attend to and perhaps it would be better if you spoke in private with the lady. Will you excuse me?’
‘Of course, Mister Bell. Be on your way, I’m sure Mrs. Moresome will be perfectly alright in my company. Is that not so, my dear?’
‘Thank you, yes,’ mumbled Belle.
Lomas bowed his departure, ‘Your servant, General. Ma’am.’
As Lomas left, gently closing the door behind him, Lamb dabbed at his leaking eye with his handkerchief.
‘We both weep, Mrs. Moresome. I from this wretched eye of mine and you for your lost husband. I fear this ruined face you see before you may cause distress, for this I apologize.’
Belle reckoned that despite his florid form and frozen features Lamb was playing at being the remembered gallant from his youth.
‘Oh, no, sir,’ she gushed. ‘Your wounds were earned in honor bound. They are marks of courage and bravery in service of our nation, I can only see them as awards of distinction.’
Lamb inclined his head in gratitude. ‘Now, how may I help you, ma’am?’
‘This is difficult,’ Belle paused. ‘I intrude and am embarrassed to come before you, General.’
‘Please, speak freely. You are the widow of one of our brave soldiers I can do less than hear you out.’
‘My Josh is lost to us and believed dead on that cold battlefield and I fear I am left in a sorry state….’
‘Josh? You refer to your husband as Josh? Surely he is full-named Joshua?’
‘Yes…. yes,’ Belle stumbled, wondering what he meant. ‘Joshua is his given name. The abbreviation was an affectionate term I had for him.’
‘Of course, forgive me; I have an exactitude over such matters. I like to see the ‘i’s’ dotted and the ‘t’s’ crossed.’
‘The failings of a bold commander and in no need of apology, sir. Why, only with such concern over detail are battles won I am sure.’
‘Precisely. Pray continue.’
‘Josh…. Joshua is newly joined to your organization. This news he has made me under the strictest vow of secrecy. I hope I may speak openly?’
‘Organization? I am at a loss, ma’am. What organization?’
‘Why the Knights of the Golden Circle, sir. Josh was so proud; he positively glowed when he received initiation. I can tell you, General; I shall remember that night for the rest of my life. Josh was so…. forceful. It was as if he had found his true calling and was at last a committed member of a band with purpose and resolve.’
‘I see,’ said Lamb doubtfully.
Belle leaned forward eagerly, her hands resting flat on the desktop. ‘I pray you do not think ill of him for imparting the knowledge, General. If I were a man I would gladly stand alongside for such a worthwhile endeavor. We must resist the invaders with all effort,’ Belle slapped her hand down angrily on the desk to press her point. ‘And failing that, find sanctuary in a land where all may have the freedoms we so enjoy here in the South. For such a cause, I too would gladly offer my body in sacrifice on the altar of war.’
Lamb’s one good eye opened wide at the outburst, ‘Well said, ma’am. Well said indeed.’
Belle retired coyly, shrinking back and dropping her hands on her lap. ‘With such men as you at our head, General. We cannot fail; I am in awe of such as you. You are like those golden gods of the Greek age, those mythical warriors who stood alone against the most trying of times.’ Belle reckoned she was going a little over the top but thought she may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb and threw caution to the winds. ‘I fall at your feet in sublime adoration and subjugation,’ she finished with a gasping whisper and her head lowered.
Lamb arched an eyebrow and harrumphed, ‘Hmm, well, you do me great honor. Indeed you do, Mrs. Moresome. I wonder might we lift the veil?’ he asked tentatively.
Belle knew she had him intrigued now but continued to play the winsome widow. “I fear not, General. Pray, do not force me, it would be most improper and although I might wish it otherwise we must keep within the boundaries of propriety.’
‘Quite so,’ said Lamb awkwardly. ‘Quite so. It would not do at all, you are most proper to remind me.’
There was silence then for a moment between them as Lamb digested her fervor and Belle allowed him enough line to be hooked.
‘So, tell me,’ said Lamb suddenly. ‘What exactly might I do for you? How may I help?’
‘It is a delicate matter of finance, General. I am sorry to bring this before you but as we left Tennessee, dear Joshua had just invested in a new stabling concern that took up all our reserves and now that he is so suddenly taken from us, the children and myself are left with nothing. And the children cry so, General. They weep nightly for loss of their father and for the emptiness of their blessed little stomachs.’
‘There will be a pension I am sure.’
Belle shook her head. ‘He is lost, sir. An unconfirmed loss and until proof is presented and his poor body discovered I fear no pension will be forthcoming. The matter is of great urgency for us just now, my children starve and I must throw myself on your mercy. I will do anything, anything at all to receive something for the little ones.’
‘I see,’ said Lamb thoughtfully, his bulky body moving restlessly in his chair. ‘Perhaps I might look into the matter. Will you leave it with me, Mrs. Moresome?’
‘Of course, General,’ Belle gushed. ‘I’m sure that anything you can do will be of the greatest help. One word from such as you and all shall be resolved. I am at your feet in overwhelmed gratitude.’
Lamb brushed nervously at his face with his handkerchief, the good side of his face twitching in indecision. ‘Might we dine together do you think?’ he asked. ‘I shall get my adjutant on the case and will have news by this evening I am sure.’
‘Thank you, thank you,’ said Belle getting to her feet. ‘To dine together! Why, what an honor that will be.’
‘Here,’ said Lamb rising himself. ‘Allow me to show you to the door.’
As he came around his desk and stood beside her, Belle fell to her knees and grasped his hand, kissing his fingers fervently. ‘Oh, sir,’ she sobbed. ‘You are the most bountiful of men.’
Lamb harrumphed awkwardly again, ‘Please, ma’am. Do not kneel before me, it is not seemly.’
‘Why should I not kneel before my savior?’ Belle panted in an exaggerated display of hysterical reverence. ‘I should pay subservience with my parted lips, a panting breast and with my whole body before such virile greatness.’
It was hard for a man like Lamb to take on such a show with his normal cold objective bearing. On the one hand he was a hardnosed commander used to deceitful subterfuge and on the other a wounded creature marginalized in society by his ugly features. For the first time in his life he found himself with an adoring female kneeling plaintively before him and hinting at surrender with all kinds of sexual innuendo. True, there had been those in the past before he had lost his looks, young women that whispered promises behind their fans at officer’s balls but that had been many years before. His life had been a lonely one since those far off days. Lamb was at a loss, a circumstance that worried him as he helped Belle to her feet.
‘Until tonight,’ he stuttered, fumbling with the door handle.
‘I look forward to it most fervently,’ Belle breathed, allowing her bosom to rise and fall rapidly as if her heart beat fast at the prospect.
When she was gone, Lamb sat down heavily at his desk musing over his own consternation. He helped himself to a brandy and thought through the meeting in a calmer frame of mind. His old, calculating self fell into place and he wondered if the woman was in truth merely a widowed hysteric brought low by grief and despair or had she meant all that she had said and was indeed a true zealot. The conundrum confused him and yet interested him. For if she was a real supporter then he had never met such an ardent lady before and in that he saw the possibility of someone who might share his cause and all it stood for. To discover a genuine soul mate in all his ambitions, what a find that would be. When at last he called his adjutant in, he ordered the officer to examine the lady’s background and find out all that he could about her and her husband.
Feeling pleased with herself, Belle left the imposing Capitol building. She felt the wind blowing across the busy tree-lined plaza outside and was glad of the cooling influence under her heavy veil and cumbersome clothes. The breeze was an overture to the rain that was in the offing and the lowering sky was increasing the temperature with its thunderous oppression. She had him, she was sure of it. It would now take little convincing to evoke some information from the man. Some more plays on his vanity and she would have him in the palm of her hand.
Carriages and horsemen made their way around the grass-covered park where groups of soldiers paraded beside the gun emplacements whilst others marched past on their duty watch. Carters hauled meager supplies in their slow moving wagons and delivery boys with full haversacks raced between them along the road. Street sellers and corner newssheet salesmen called their wares, all amidst the stinging dust swept up by a relentless wind that rushed across the square.
As Joe Bellows walked towards the Capitol building wiping some of the grit from his eye, he skirted a loaded wagon and noted the erect posture of the woman dressed in black as she descended the steps. A fine looking creature, he reckoned. Another one set free by the killing. Richmond was becoming a playground of widows and camp concubines ready for the plucking. He leered at the thought then a dusty gust blew down the street and his face dropped.
The wind caught Belle’s veil like a sail, it blew underneath and lifted the black cloth high above her head. She caught it quickly and struggled to pull the material back down again in the constant breeze. But she was too late.
‘Belle Slaughter!’ snarled Bellows.
He watched her move off and followed, keeping well back in the crowd of pedestrians.